This story is from March 27, 2010

Abba ready for a one-off reunion?

Swedish supergroup Abba may perform again nearly 30 years after they split, the former male members of the band hinted on Friday.
Abba ready for a one-off reunion?
LONDON: Swedish supergroup Abba may perform again nearly 30 years after they split, the former male members of the band hinted on Friday.
The group, one of the most successful in history, has enjoyed continued fame since breaking up in 1982, thanks to tribute bands mimicking their satin outfits and easy-listening music and lyrics.
They attracted new fans recently with the musical “Mamma Mia!” which was turned into a film.

But they have persistently shunned the chance to regroup, turning down as much as $1 billion to tour again in 2000. However Benny Andersson and Bjorn Ulvaeus told The Times newspaper that an intimate one-off performance that could be screened around the world could be a possibility.
“Yeah, why not?” said Andersson, who now owns a farm where he breeds horses. “I don’t know if the girls sing anything any more,” he added. “I know Frida was in the studio.”
He added later, “It’s not a bad idea, actually.”
Ulvaeus said, “We could sing ‘The Way Old Folks Do,’” in a reference to one of the songs from their “Super Trouper” album.
Observers have always thought too many barriers existed to the band reforming, including the reclusive lifestyle of the blonde female member Agnetha Faltskog.

Andersson and Ulvaeus have responded negatively in the past too.
Two years ago Ulvaeus said, “We will never appear on stage again. There is no motivation to regroup. Money is not a factor and we would like people to remember us as we were — young, exuberant, full of energy and ambition.”
Lyngstad married a German prince and lives in the Swiss Alps. She is thought to be relatively amenable to a reunion, the newspaper said.
The reaction from the pair — speaking in London where they were working on a new musical theatre production — marks a change in tone to how they have responded to repeated requests to stage come-back shows in the past.
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